There is really no substitute for "agile web feet." Your best bet is to visit the Mark Twain Resources on the World Wide Web site at http://web.syr.edu/~fjzwick/twainwww.html -- preferably using Netscape, Mosaic, or another graphics-capable web browser. It lists somewhere around 75-80 sites that contain information related to Mark Twain. They are organized into the categories outlined below: Exhibits (these are also the two most in-depth sites) -- Mark Twain's Huckleberry Finn: Text, Illustrations, and Early Reviews, by Virginia H. Cope, University of Virginia. Included online are the full text of the novel, all of the illustrations used in the first edition, the little-known obscene illustration that appeared in sales prospectuses, many early newspaper and magazine reviews, advertisements, and a 1930 article by E.W. Kemble about his experiences illustrating the book. -- Mark Twain on the Philippines, by Jim Zwick. Includes three of Twain's anti-imperialist essays, photos and political cartoons, three dozen contemporary editorials about Twain's interviews, speeches and writings, essays about his ten-year involvement as a vice president of the Anti-Imperialist League, and the texts of the League's platform and the three petitions Twain signed. E-Text Collections -- Lists Twain titles available from the major text archives as well as those available from Twain-specific sites. The 13 archives whose Twain titles are included are in the U.S., U.K., Hong Kong and Russia. Texts are in ASCII, HTML (WWW) and/or SGML (a standard markup language for electronic text manipulation and research) formats Scattered Writings -- Lists Twain titles available from sites that do not specialize in Twain and generally have only a few Twain texts available (now includes a link to _1601_ which has just recently been put online) Popular Culture -- Twain in film, TV, traditional and recent music, banning of Huck Finn, etc. Sci-Fi TV -- Star Trek: The Next Generation and Babylon 5 episodes Homes and Haunts -- Sites devoted to Twain's residences and experiences in Hartford, Hannibal, Elmira, Bermuda Scholarly Studies -- Articles on Twain in _Nineteenth Century Literature_ -- Short criticism (Tesla on Twain) -- University press books by and about Twain -- Info on the research collections in Hannibal and Florida Syllabi and other Resources for Teachers -- One syllabus, the Readers' Theater edition of "The War Prayer", and B&R Samizdat Express e-texts on disk service Mark Twain Forum E-Mail List -- General information, Taylor Roberts' page, and the Mailing List WWW Gateway The initial results of my online survey about educational uses of this web site might also be of interest. Follow the survey link at the top of the page and page down to the link to the results page. Besides the "General Interest" use that I knew it was getting, there are quite a few K-12 and college teachers and students using it in the classroom and for research. The comments describe some of the classroom uses and research projects. Jim Zwick